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10-31-2004, 12:32 PM
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#331 of 490
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Member
Location: St. Louis, MO
Join Date: Feb 2000
Local Time: 09:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 10,460
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Saw - An interesting concept and an intense narrative is compromised by cliched filmmaking and an awful ending. B (probably too generous but I'd forgotten how fun it was to see a horror movie with a crowd)
I Heart Huckabees - Ugh, Eternal Sunshine redux as I fight the urge to claw my eyes out to avoid more of this pretentious nonsense. Jude Law is occassionally humorous and I enjoyed Jon Brion's score (though it only served to remind me of PTA's far better films) but the film is packed with so much philosophical technobabble and cool irony that it has no real heart at all. I tuned out early and spent most of the running time debating whether I should leave or stay simply so I could add it to my seen list. C- (boy am I feeling generous today)
Yes, Captain Hammer's here, hair blowing in the breeze. The day needs my saving expertise! - Captain Hammer, Corporate Tool
2002 Sight & Sound Challenge: 314 Last Watched: An Autumn Afternoon
Last 10 Films Watched:
Mon Oncle Antoine - B / Late Autumn - A-
Paranoid Park - B / An Autumn Afternoon - A
Forgetting Sarah Marshall - B / Run, Fatboy, Run - B
Get Smart - C- / Rendition - B-
Springtime in a Small Town - B+ / Evan Almighty - C
DVD BEAVER My Collection
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11-02-2004, 04:09 AM
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#332 of 490
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Member
Join Date: Nov 1998
Local Time: 04:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 12,185
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It's not clear to me what the theatrical release pattern for Ginger Snaps 2 was, all IMDb has for the US is a 2004 video release. So it goes in my 2004 list.
8 of 10 film for me, I really enjoyed the original, a metaphor for sisters dealing with the older sister hitting puberty and leaving her younger sister behind for her new adult life that also worked as straight horror. Here they managed to dig up yet another troubled young girl issue of addiction and cutting/bleeding that has become a more common problem lately.
Brook, I read I Heart Huckabees totally differently than you did it appears.
I Heart Huckabees
9.5 of 10
A terrific use of characters as tangible versions of various philosophical ideals which allows several of the key characters to humorously and interestingly explore their life crises without resorting to sitting around a coffee table just discussing the issues. If you found Waking Life too dull, here are some of the same issues now debated with a real sense of humor without forgetting to care about the central figures.
I viewed almost every character outside of the big 4 (Swartzman, Wahlberg, Law, Watts) to be symbolic rather than literal, figures representing the various mindsets that people go through as they deal with tramatic upheaval in their life. From optimistic "everything is connected" views to pessimisstic "nothing matters" views to the basic tenets of Christian morals, the entire film is really about the main characters trying to utilize these various views in order to make sense of their life.
The final realization - it takes a bit of everything.
I can see a lot of mainstream audiences being turned off by nonsensical characters and situations that are allowed to exist in metaphorical film worlds such as this one. Obviously it didn't bother me however.
And I was more struck with a Wes Anderson vibe than a Spotless Mind vibe from this film.
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11-08-2004, 09:11 PM
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#334 of 490
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2000
Local Time: 07:06 AM
Local Date: 11-19-2008
Posts: 4,486
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Jason usually starts the Top 10 thread on the first or second day of January.
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11-09-2004, 02:46 AM
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#335 of 490
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Member
Location: St. Louis, MO
Join Date: Feb 2000
Local Time: 09:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 10,460
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Stage Beauty - Is at its best when it is fun, light, and entertaining, with Rupert Everett's King Charles and his mistress getting the best material and funniest lines. But as a movie about acting and stage life it takes itself way too seriously, is saddled with Billy Crudup's standard "star who has a terrible downfall, learns something about themself, and comes back wiser and better off" character arc, and a romance without much heat between Claire Danes and Crudup. The direction is mediocre as well, including poor shot matching and obvious inserts. Crudup is quite convincing as a female impersonator, has lots of enthusiasm for the role, and there are some really fun moments, it's just too bad the movie as a whole isn't better. B-
Valentin - Another in a long line of foreign films about precocious children, Valentin is an Argentinian movie about a boy living with his grandmother, feeling rejected by his parents, making friends with various adults, and learning about life and in turn affecting their lives. While the film possesses a few scenes of touching emotion, the film often feels very packaged and imitative of similar films. B-
Next Up: A Home At The End Of The World, Saved!
Yes, Captain Hammer's here, hair blowing in the breeze. The day needs my saving expertise! - Captain Hammer, Corporate Tool
2002 Sight & Sound Challenge: 314 Last Watched: An Autumn Afternoon
Last 10 Films Watched:
Mon Oncle Antoine - B / Late Autumn - A-
Paranoid Park - B / An Autumn Afternoon - A
Forgetting Sarah Marshall - B / Run, Fatboy, Run - B
Get Smart - C- / Rendition - B-
Springtime in a Small Town - B+ / Evan Almighty - C
DVD BEAVER My Collection
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11-10-2004, 11:58 AM
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#337 of 490
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Member
Location: St. Louis, MO
Join Date: Feb 2000
Local Time: 09:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 10,460
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Saved! - At times a fun parody of the "hip" Christian movement and teen films in general, but in parodying a genre that mostly produces barely watchable films, it commits many of the same mistakes. It can be quite funny, there are some solid, even interesting characters and relationships, but the movie is in such a rush to pack lots of events, jokes, and characters into 90 minutes, that it creates a lot of uneven scenes. The film also can't make up it's mind whether it wants to really attack the hypocracies it displays, or just be a feel good date movie. B-
(It is nice to see Mary Louis Parker looking more scrumptious than ever  )
A Home At The End Of The World - In this film taken from another book by Micheal "The Hours" Cunningham, a boy who repeatedly suffers the loss of family members finds a partner for life in his best friend. The movie takes a long time to get going thanks to a tepid multi-actor "characters as boys and then teenagers" section kept alive only by the appearance of Sissy Spacek as a mother to one of the characters.
In it's "adult" section, with Colin Farrell as one of the friends and Robin Wright Penn as lover,wife,mother to both, the film becomes more alive and heartfelt. Farrell effectively portrays an innocent, for whom the tragedies of life simply wash over him as long as he has the company of other loved ones. Its message that the only thing that really matters between two people is how much they love one another, is attractive as well. It is simply unfortunate that the film falls into the typical American trap of being more concerned with describing events than people. Why do so many movies feel compelled to take us to a different location for some event (in this movie's case, usually a death), than whisk us somewhere else, and then we pause for a minute, and then we're off to do something else, etc, when it would be so much more effective just to have the characters talk to each other for more than 4 lines?
For a portion of the running time anyway, it has rich characters and emotional performances. The film just doesn't make as effective use of them as it should. B-
Yes, Captain Hammer's here, hair blowing in the breeze. The day needs my saving expertise! - Captain Hammer, Corporate Tool
2002 Sight & Sound Challenge: 314 Last Watched: An Autumn Afternoon
Last 10 Films Watched:
Mon Oncle Antoine - B / Late Autumn - A-
Paranoid Park - B / An Autumn Afternoon - A
Forgetting Sarah Marshall - B / Run, Fatboy, Run - B
Get Smart - C- / Rendition - B-
Springtime in a Small Town - B+ / Evan Almighty - C
DVD BEAVER My Collection
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11-10-2004, 02:03 PM
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#338 of 490
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Member
Join Date: Nov 1998
Local Time: 04:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 12,185
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Quote:
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It is simply unfortunate that the film falls into the typical American trap of being more concerned with describing events than people.
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A very interesting point, Brook. I do think you might be on to something, although I would note that Hitch made a pretty good living on the strength of describing SITUATIONS, which is still not people. I do think he let the characters come out too, but most of his trademark scenes are about setting up all the mise en scene for a tension-based situation.
I suppose your theory goes hand in hand with the modern tradition of assuming cinematography means sweeping vista shots and giant landscapes most of the time. However, I'm not so sure this is just an American phenomenon.
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11-11-2004, 11:10 AM
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#339 of 490
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Member
Join Date: Oct 1998
Local Time: 02:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 9,266
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 Brad Bird's The Incredibles
The Ladykillers - I enjoyed the writing, music and Ethan and Joel Coen's offbeat humor on this one and thought it was better than Intolerable Cruelty. The Coen brothers have still yet to disappoint me.
~Edwin
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11-12-2004, 11:33 AM
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#340 of 490
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Member
Join Date: Dec 1969
Local Time: 04:06 PM
Local Date: 11-18-2008
Posts: 12,266
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Gads, has it been almost a month since the BFFF? I need to get to more first-run stuff.
#123: Shark Tale -   ½ - Only fitfully funny, though colorful
#124: Goodbye Dragon Inn -    | |